Adobe 23101335 Scripting Guide - Page 16

Operators, Pride + and Prejudice

Page 16 highlights

Scripting basics 2 Operators 2.6 Operators Operators perform calculations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) on variables or values and return a result. For example: docWidth/2 would return a value equal to half of the content of the variable docWidth. So if docWidth contained the number 20.5, the value returned would be 10.25. You can also use operators to perform comparisons (equal to, not equal to, greater than, or less than, etc.). Some operators differ between AppleScript, Visual Basic and JavaScript. Consult your scripting language for operators that may be unique to your OS. AppleScript and Visual Basic use the ampersand (&) as the concatenation operator to join two strings. "Pride " & "and Prejudice." would return the string "Pride and Prejudice." JavaScript uses the "+" operator to concatenate strings. "Pride" + " and Prejudice" would return the string "Pride and Prejudice." Photoshop 7.0 Scripting Guide 16

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Photoshop 7.0 Scripting Guide
16
Scripting basics
Operators
2
2.6 Operators
Operators perform calculations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division) on
variables or values and return a result. For example:
docWidth/2
would return a value equal to half of the content of the variable
docWidth
. So if
docWidth
contained the number
20.5,
the value returned would be
10.25
.
You can also use operators to perform comparisons (equal to, not equal to, greater than, or less
than, etc.). Some operators differ between AppleScript, Visual Basic and JavaScript. Consult
your scripting language for operators that may be unique to your OS.
AppleScript and Visual Basic use the ampersand (
&
) as the concatenation operator to join two
strings.
"Pride " & "and Prejudice."
would return the string “Pride and Prejudice.”
JavaScript uses the “+” operator to concatenate strings.
"Pride" + " and Prejudice"
would return the string “Pride and Prejudice.”